In one Royal Octavo volume, with 109 fine Wood-Engravings and 624 pages.
| United States. | Canada (duty paid). | Great Britain. | France. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price, in Cloth, | $4.50, net | $5.00, net | 24s. 6d. | 27 fr. 20 |
| Price, in Sheep or ½-Russia, | 5.50, net | 6.10, net | 30s. | 33 fr. 10 |
Stephen Smith, M.D., Professor of Clinical Surgery Medical Department University of the City of New York, writes: “There has long been great need of a work on the principles of surgery which would fully illustrate the present advanced state of knowledge of the various subjects embraced in this volume. The work seems to me to meet this want admirably.”
Frank J. Lutz, M.D., St. Louis, Mo., says: “It seems incredible that those who pretend to teach have done without such a guide before, and I do not understand how our students succeeded in mastering the principles of modern surgery by attempting to read our obsolete text-books. American surgery should feel proud of the production, and the present generation of surgeons owe you a debt of gratitude.”
The work is systematic and compact, without a fact omitted or a sentence too much, and it not only makes instructive but fascinating reading. A conspicuous merit of Senn’s work is his method, his persistent and tireless search through original investigations for additions to knowledge, and the practical character of his discoveries.—The Review of Insanity and Nervous Diseases.
After perusing this work on several different occasions, we have come to the conclusion that it is a remarkable work, by a man of unusual ability.—The Canada Medical Record.
The work is exceedingly practical, as the chapters on the treatment of the various conditions considered are based on sound deductions, are complete, and easily carried out by any painstaking surgeon.—Medical Record.
The book throughout is worthy of the highest praise. It should be adopted as a text-book in all of our schools.—University Medical Magazine.
By the Same Author
Tuberculosis of the Bones and Joints.